Background: Renal diseases are currently posing a great health concern worldwide. Proper documentation, knowledge of renal disease burdens, and established renal registries will provide data to guide stake-holders in future planning and resource allocation. This study aims at documenting the pattern and outcome of childhood renal diseases admitted at our centre. Methods: This was a prospective study of all childhood renal diseases admitted into the pediatrics wards of the Abia State University Teaching Hospital, Aba, from October 2013 to October 2018. The demographic characteristics of the patients, ingestion of herbal concoctions, clinical presentation, laboratory investigations, diagnosis and management outcomes were documented, and analysed. Result: A total of 6108 children were admitted into the paediatric wards during the study period. One hundred and four (104) of them had renal diseases, accounting for 1.7% of paediatric admissions. There was male preponderance (55.8%) with a Male: Female ratio of 1.3:1. Sex had significant association with renal diseases (p-Value=0.025). The age range was 0.5 – 16 years with a mean age of 7.9±4.5 years. Majority (40.4%) of the patients were aged 5-10 years (p-Value 0.021). Nephrotic Syndrome (47.1%), Acute Kidney Injury (10.6%) and Acute Glomerular Nephritis (10.6%) were the commonest causes of admission. Proteinuria (39.4%), Oedema (39.4%) and Oliguria (26.9%) were the most frequent clinical presentations. Progressive increase in yearly diagnosis of renal diseases was observed. More than 90% of the patients took herbal remedies before presentation (p-Value=0.001). Mortality rate was 4.8%. Causes of death were Chronic Kidney Disease (40%), Acute Kidney Injury (20%), Wilms tumour (20%), and HIVAN (20%). Conclusion: The prevalence of childhood renal diseases in Aba is 1.7%. Nephrotic syndrome is the commonest cause of renal admission in our centre. Ingestion of herbal concoctions by our cohort was high. There was an annual increment in the number of renal disorders in our centre. Preventive nephrology should be adopted to curb the morbidity and mortality from renal diseases worldwide.
Published in | American Journal of Pediatrics (Volume 6, Issue 3) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27 |
Page(s) | 278-284 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Childhood, Renal Diseases, Aba, Nigeria
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APA Style
Nneka Chioma Okoronkwo, Assumpta Udechi Chappjumbo, Benson Nnamdi Onyire, Samuel Chidi Ekpemo, Stella Nnenne Ijeoma. (2020). Pattern of Childhood Renal Diseases in Aba, South East Nigeria. American Journal of Pediatrics, 6(3), 278-284. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27
ACS Style
Nneka Chioma Okoronkwo; Assumpta Udechi Chappjumbo; Benson Nnamdi Onyire; Samuel Chidi Ekpemo; Stella Nnenne Ijeoma. Pattern of Childhood Renal Diseases in Aba, South East Nigeria. Am. J. Pediatr. 2020, 6(3), 278-284. doi: 10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27
AMA Style
Nneka Chioma Okoronkwo, Assumpta Udechi Chappjumbo, Benson Nnamdi Onyire, Samuel Chidi Ekpemo, Stella Nnenne Ijeoma. Pattern of Childhood Renal Diseases in Aba, South East Nigeria. Am J Pediatr. 2020;6(3):278-284. doi: 10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27
@article{10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27, author = {Nneka Chioma Okoronkwo and Assumpta Udechi Chappjumbo and Benson Nnamdi Onyire and Samuel Chidi Ekpemo and Stella Nnenne Ijeoma}, title = {Pattern of Childhood Renal Diseases in Aba, South East Nigeria}, journal = {American Journal of Pediatrics}, volume = {6}, number = {3}, pages = {278-284}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajp.20200603.27}, abstract = {Background: Renal diseases are currently posing a great health concern worldwide. Proper documentation, knowledge of renal disease burdens, and established renal registries will provide data to guide stake-holders in future planning and resource allocation. This study aims at documenting the pattern and outcome of childhood renal diseases admitted at our centre. Methods: This was a prospective study of all childhood renal diseases admitted into the pediatrics wards of the Abia State University Teaching Hospital, Aba, from October 2013 to October 2018. The demographic characteristics of the patients, ingestion of herbal concoctions, clinical presentation, laboratory investigations, diagnosis and management outcomes were documented, and analysed. Result: A total of 6108 children were admitted into the paediatric wards during the study period. One hundred and four (104) of them had renal diseases, accounting for 1.7% of paediatric admissions. There was male preponderance (55.8%) with a Male: Female ratio of 1.3:1. Sex had significant association with renal diseases (p-Value=0.025). The age range was 0.5 – 16 years with a mean age of 7.9±4.5 years. Majority (40.4%) of the patients were aged 5-10 years (p-Value 0.021). Nephrotic Syndrome (47.1%), Acute Kidney Injury (10.6%) and Acute Glomerular Nephritis (10.6%) were the commonest causes of admission. Proteinuria (39.4%), Oedema (39.4%) and Oliguria (26.9%) were the most frequent clinical presentations. Progressive increase in yearly diagnosis of renal diseases was observed. More than 90% of the patients took herbal remedies before presentation (p-Value=0.001). Mortality rate was 4.8%. Causes of death were Chronic Kidney Disease (40%), Acute Kidney Injury (20%), Wilms tumour (20%), and HIVAN (20%). Conclusion: The prevalence of childhood renal diseases in Aba is 1.7%. Nephrotic syndrome is the commonest cause of renal admission in our centre. Ingestion of herbal concoctions by our cohort was high. There was an annual increment in the number of renal disorders in our centre. Preventive nephrology should be adopted to curb the morbidity and mortality from renal diseases worldwide.}, year = {2020} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Pattern of Childhood Renal Diseases in Aba, South East Nigeria AU - Nneka Chioma Okoronkwo AU - Assumpta Udechi Chappjumbo AU - Benson Nnamdi Onyire AU - Samuel Chidi Ekpemo AU - Stella Nnenne Ijeoma Y1 - 2020/07/17 PY - 2020 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27 DO - 10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27 T2 - American Journal of Pediatrics JF - American Journal of Pediatrics JO - American Journal of Pediatrics SP - 278 EP - 284 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2472-0909 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajp.20200603.27 AB - Background: Renal diseases are currently posing a great health concern worldwide. Proper documentation, knowledge of renal disease burdens, and established renal registries will provide data to guide stake-holders in future planning and resource allocation. This study aims at documenting the pattern and outcome of childhood renal diseases admitted at our centre. Methods: This was a prospective study of all childhood renal diseases admitted into the pediatrics wards of the Abia State University Teaching Hospital, Aba, from October 2013 to October 2018. The demographic characteristics of the patients, ingestion of herbal concoctions, clinical presentation, laboratory investigations, diagnosis and management outcomes were documented, and analysed. Result: A total of 6108 children were admitted into the paediatric wards during the study period. One hundred and four (104) of them had renal diseases, accounting for 1.7% of paediatric admissions. There was male preponderance (55.8%) with a Male: Female ratio of 1.3:1. Sex had significant association with renal diseases (p-Value=0.025). The age range was 0.5 – 16 years with a mean age of 7.9±4.5 years. Majority (40.4%) of the patients were aged 5-10 years (p-Value 0.021). Nephrotic Syndrome (47.1%), Acute Kidney Injury (10.6%) and Acute Glomerular Nephritis (10.6%) were the commonest causes of admission. Proteinuria (39.4%), Oedema (39.4%) and Oliguria (26.9%) were the most frequent clinical presentations. Progressive increase in yearly diagnosis of renal diseases was observed. More than 90% of the patients took herbal remedies before presentation (p-Value=0.001). Mortality rate was 4.8%. Causes of death were Chronic Kidney Disease (40%), Acute Kidney Injury (20%), Wilms tumour (20%), and HIVAN (20%). Conclusion: The prevalence of childhood renal diseases in Aba is 1.7%. Nephrotic syndrome is the commonest cause of renal admission in our centre. Ingestion of herbal concoctions by our cohort was high. There was an annual increment in the number of renal disorders in our centre. Preventive nephrology should be adopted to curb the morbidity and mortality from renal diseases worldwide. VL - 6 IS - 3 ER -